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On Revolution PDF

308 Pages·2006·1.66 MB·English
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PENGUIN CLASSICS ON REVOLUTION HANNAH ARENDT was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1906. She studied at the Universities of Marburg and Freiburg and received her doctorate in philosophy at the University of Heidelberg, where she studied under Karl Jaspers. In 1933 she fled from Germany and went to France, where she worked for the immigration of Jewish refugee children into Palestine. In 1941 she went to the United States and became an American citizen ten years later. She was a research director of the Conference on Jewish Relations, chief editor of Schocken Books, executive director of Jewish Cultural Reconstruction in New York City, a visiting professor at several universities, including California, Princeton, Columbia, and Chicago, and university professor at the graduate faculty of the New School for Social Research. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1952 and won the annual Arts and Letters grant of the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1954. Hannah Arendt’s books include The Origins of Totalitarianism, Crises of the Republic, Men in Dark Times, Between Past and Future: Eight Exercises in Political Thought, and On Violence and Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. She also edited two volumes of Karl Jasper’s The Great Philosophers. Hannah Arendt died in December 1975. JONATHAN SCHELL is the Harold Willens Peace Fellow at the Nation Institute and the author of The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People (Metropolitan) and The Fate of the Earth, among other books. HANNAH ARENDT On Revolution Introduction by JONATHAN SCHELL PENGUIN BOOKS Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A. Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd) Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd) Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi – 110 017, India Penguin Group (NZ), Cnr Airborne and Rosedale Roads, Albany, Auckland 1310, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd) Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England First published in the United States of America by The Viking Press 1963 Revised edition published in a Viking Compass edition 1965 Published in Penguin Books 1977 This edition with an introduction by Jonathan Schell published 2006 Copyright © Hannah Arendt, 1963, 1965 Copyright renewed Lotte Kohler, 1991 Introduction copyright © Jonathan Schell, 2006 All rights reserved LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA Arendt, Hannah. On revolution / Hannah Arendt ; introduction by Jonathan Schell. p. cm. Originally published: New York : Viking Press, c1963. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN: 978-1-101-66264-9 1. Revolutions. I. Title. JC491.A68 2006 321.09’4—dc22 2006045397 Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. To Gertrud and Karl Jaspers In reverence—in friendship—in love Contents Introduction by Jonathan Schell ON REVOLUTION Introduction: War and Revolution 1. The Meaning of Revolution 2. The Social Question 3. The Pursuit of Happiness 4. Foundation I: Constitutio Libertatis 5. Foundation II: Novus Ordo Saeclorum 6. The Revolutionary Tradition and Its Lost Treasure Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments The topic of this book was suggested to me by a seminar on ‘The United States and the Revolutionary Spirit’, held at Princeton University in the spring of 1959 under the auspices of the Special Program in American Civilization. For the completion of the work I am indebted to a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1960 and to my stay as Fellow of the Center for Advanced Studies at Wesleyan University in the fall of 1961. HANNAH ARENDT New York, September 1962 Introduction THE ARENDTIAN REVOLUTIONS In The Origins of Totalitarianism, published in 1951, Arendt fixed her gaze in grief and indignation on the recently overthrown totalitarian regime of Adolph Hitler in Germany and the still-existing one of Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. In On Revolution, published twelve years later, she cast her eye forward in hope, without knowing it, to a still-invisible near future, namely the wave of nonviolent movements that, between the mid-1970s and the present, brought democratic governments to power in dozens of nations on all continents, from Greece to South Africa to Chile to Poland and, finally, to the Soviet Union itself. These revolutions might be called Arendtian revolutions, though not in the sense that earlier ones were Marxist revolutions. The new revolutionaries, with a few notable exceptions, did not study Arendt as the Marxists had studied Marx; yet to a remarkable extent the revolutions they made somehow followed pathways first traced by Arendt in thought. Having no ambition as a prophet, she turned out to be one. The story of her journey from the one book to the other, it seems to me, sheds some light on the coming events that On Revolution unknowingly foretold. All of those revolutions occurred, of course, after Arendt wrote her book, and this introduction’s readers, who in any case may prefer reading the book before reading commentary on it and so avoid any preview of it, are invited to turn to Arendt first, and consider these words as an epilogue. Arendt combined a visceral, impassioned response to contemporary events with an immense depth of historical and philosophical knowledge. She was a keen follower of the news, where that “old trickster World History” (as she and her husband used to say in their letters to one another) was at work, and her chorus of “Ach!”s and other sighs and explosions of feeling while watching television reports was an object of affectionate, amused commentary among her friends. It’s tempting to say that she brought philosophy to bear on events; but the truth appears to have been more nearly the opposite. It was events that set her mind in motion, and philosophy that had to adjust. Sometimes the adjustment was minor—a sharp rebuke to some article of conventional wisdom (for example, the idea that totalitarianism was just a new variation on dictatorship)— and sometimes it was monumental (for example, her challenge to the low station assigned to politics in the entire Western philosophical tradition, from the ancient Greeks forward). Yet if as a political thinker, she was more deductive than inductive, more Baconian than Aristotelian, neither the modern nor the ancient model of science truly represented her style of inquiry; for if she did not start with generalizations and then seek instances, neither did she quite start by collecting events and then deducing a rule. Rather, her thinking seems to “crystallize” (the word is hers) around events, like a coral reef branching outward, one thought leading to another. The result is an independent body of coherent but never systematically ordered reflection that, while seeming to grow from within over her lifetime, according to laws and principles peculiar to itself, at the same time manages to continually illuminate contemporary affairs. TWO WORLDS IN ONE MIND Still, there are sharp turns in the road, and the shift in substance and mood from The Origins of Totalitarianism to On Revolution is one of them. A reader confronted by these two books alone might find it difficult to imagine that they were written by the same author. In Origins, we are in a world of rampant, triumphant evil. The enormities of totalitarianism have far outdistanced anything in the past. Whereas previous tyrants contented themselves chiefly with domination of the political sphere, leaving private life, and sometimes large swaths of economic and cultural life, alone, the totalitarians have laid claim to every corner of human existence. Totalitarianism’s essence, she asserts, is the total domination of human beings by terror. It is not only the scale of the crimes that is novel; it is their very character. At their heart is the attempted extirpation of all human “spontaneity,” which is to say human freedom. Nothing less than radical surgery upon “human nature” has been attempted. To this end, the essential means is the concentration camp system, perfected in different forms by Stalin and Hitler. It acts by tearing down the dignity of human beings, layer by layer, first nullifying the “judicial person,” then destroying the “moral person” (by forcing the inmates to make choices between criminal alternatives), and finally tearing down “individuality,” the seat of spontaneity, leaving, in place of recognizable human beings, “ghastly marionettes with human face.”1 Not only individuals, but the human worlds to which they belong—classes, communities, peoples—are thrown down “holes of oblivion.” The dead die a second time by being forgotten. The totalitarians could perform such feats because among their novel arts was a wholesale assault of the factual world and a replacement of it with a factitious world of their own devising. As for the organizers of these atrocities, she finds that they, too, present horrifying novel features. Their motivations are no more like those of classical tyrants than their crimes are like the crimes of the past. Moved not by such familiar cravings as cupidity, territorial expansion, or even lust for power, they in fact set as little store on their own personal survival as on the survival of others, “and do not care whether they themselves are alive or dead, if they ever lived or never were born.”2 Rather, insofar as motivation is detectable at all, they take satisfaction in participating in, or at least being swept along with, gigantic historical processes whose stages and destinations are set forth in their ideological schemes. Grasping for a term to describe the new reality, she tentatively turned to Immanuel Kant’s phrase “radical evil.” Evil is radical when it destroys not only its victims but also the means by which survivors might seek to respond. As she wrote later, the hallmark of radically evil deeds is that they “transcend the realm of human affairs and the potentialities of human power, both of which they radically destroy wherever they make their appearance.” Though she later renounced the phrase, it reveals the extent of the victory of evil in her view of totalitarianism. The world seems to have no unshattered tools at its disposal. The Western tradition of thought is a heap of ruins. The rights of man have been exploded. The law is helpless, even after the fact, to come to terms with the crimes that have been committed, for those have themselves transcended or actually destroyed the legal systems by which they might have been judged. (Only some court with species-wide jurisdiction might possibly suffice, but in the early 1950s none is on the horizon, much less in session.) Spiritual resources, too, have been exhausted: forgiveness—one way of coming to terms with wrongdoing—cannot encompass the immensity of these crimes. Reality itself has also proved a weak reed in the face of the totalitarian onslaught. If the regime lies, it can alter reality itself to fit the illusion—for example, by murdering whole classes or races to “prove” that History has doomed them. Even human nature, once thought unconquerable, has been dismantled in the camp system. Alongside this portrait of the political world, On Revolution seems to belong

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Tracing the gradual evolution of revolutions, Arendt predicts the changing relationship between war and revolution and the crucial role such combustive movements will play in the future of international relations. She looks at the principles which underlie all revolutions, starting with the first gr
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